- The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) is the shortened version of the Symptoms Checklist-90.
- The BSI is a 53-item questionnaire covering nine symptom dimensions of depression:
1) Somatization
2) Obsession-compulsion
3) Interpersonal sensitivity
4) Depression
5) Anxiety
6) Hostility
7) Phobic anxiety
8) Paranoid ideation
9) Psychoticism
- 3 global indices of distress are also used: Global Severity Index, Positive Symptom Distress Index, and Positive Symptom Total. These measure number and intensity of reported symptoms, as well as the current or past level of symptomatology.
Clinical Considerations
- The BSI is a well-known and well-accepted instrument.
- The BSI is best used to screen for global psychological distress.
- The inclusion of somatic items may cause an overestimation of psychiatric symptoms in individuals with SCI.
- Normative data are available for a variety of non-SCI populations. The Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale was found to have higher sensitivity compared to the BSI when identifying individuals with depression.
- The BSI was not written for the SCI population, therefore, some items may not be appropriate.
- This test is simple and easy to administer.
ICF Domain
Body Function ▶ Mental Functions